US Government Quiet About California Missile Nearly Two Weeks Ago: Frantic TSA at Airports but Hush with Missle

Has the United States government swept the fact that a possible missile was fired off the coast of California nearly two weeks ago? The story quickly died, and there really hasn't been much talk about what witnesses really saw fly 35 miles off the coast. Why isn't our government more concerned?

The latest TSA airport controversies really put in perspective the BS that we call national security these days. Men and women are being groped in airports across the great Republic and we are told it's keeping us safer; however, no one knows what that trail of smoke was that rose upwards off the California coast. It seems the government doesn't want us to know either. If a foreign entity got that close with submarined and fired a missile, well, I shouldn't have to tell you how worthless this TSA operation is, should I?

World Net Daily claims two military experts believe the missile was Chinese. Yet, our citizens are being molested at airports for security, when it's obvious this cover up by our government proves national security is just rhetoric.

Two governmental military experts with extensive experience working with missiles and computer security systems have examined the television video and conclude the mysterious contrail originating some 30 miles off the coast near Los Angeles did not come from a jet – but rather, they say the exhaust and the billowing plume emanated from a single source nozzle of a missile, probably made in China.

They further suggest the missile was fired from a submerged Chinese nuclear submarine off America's coast, and point out that the timing of the alleged Chinese missile shot coincided with an increasing confrontation between the U.S. and China, and was likely meant to send a message to Washington.

Indeed, the Federal Aviation Administration documents that there were no aircraft flying in the area at that time, the night of Nov. 8.

"The question that still must be answered is why NORAD's muted response was simply that North America was not threatened, and later our government approved the lame excuse that the picture recorded was simply an aircraft leaving a contrail," said retired U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Jim Cash.

A former U.S. Air Force fighter pilot and commander of an F-15 squadron and an F-16 wing, Cash was assigned to NORAD as an assistant director of operations at the Cheyenne Mountain complex near Colorado Springs, Colo., and is fully knowledgeable of NORAD procedures.

"There is absolutely no doubt that what was captured on video off the coast of California was a missile launch, was clearly observed by NORAD, assessed by a four-star general in minutes, and passed to the president immediately," he said.